Anthroposophy's
contribution
to the most
urgent
needs of our time
R
U D O L F S T E I N E R
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Lecture
given by Rudolf Steiner at Stuttgart on September 5th, 1921.
Published in agreement with the Rudolf Steiner Nachlassverwaltung in
a translation by F. Hough. The German text is contained in
Anthropososophie ihre Erkenntniswurzeln and Lebensfriichte, Blbl. No.
78.
The most significant question
in the spiritual life of our time, which casts its shadow over the whole
of our culture, is of such a nature that it already affects every
man's feeling life to some extent. Yet its answer can only be found
on the path leading from ordinary objective knowledge to
super-sensible cognition by means of Imagination, Inspiration and
Intuition. Each soul must ask himself this significant question,
when, in genuine concern for the being of man, he contrasts, with a
complete lack of bias, the conception of the moral, ethical life that
is possible today, with the interpretation of life that stems with
good reason from a natural scientific world conception. What is more,
in our day the question of morality is of the greatest urgency
because we live in that period of time when what is ethical is at the
same time social, and today every man experience the urgency of the
social question.
Let us consider what the soul
learns about existence in conformity with today's thinking as it is
shaped by natural science. In the attempt to reach a true natural
science, man is led to consider the objects of the world in their
necessity, in their causal connections. This results in a world
outlook which must necessarily extend these causal connections to
comprise everything that is within the world order, including man.
Today, in so far as we wish to understand man by means of natural
science, we take it as a foregone conclusion that we apply that same
cognition that we are accustomed to use when considering natural
appearances outside man, and we then attempt to extend in more or
less audacious hypotheses, what natural science has learnt from
what is lying nearest to us, that we are able to observe, to cover
world facts and world beings. We construct hypotheses about the
beginning and the end of the world, out of our natural scientific
theories of knowledge. Then we come with this natural scientific
knowledge to the point where if we are consistent we must say,
‘We may not come to a halt before human freedom.’ I have
already indicated this problem.
A man who seeks a strictly
uniform explanation of the world, simply out of a desire for
consistency, and has to decide between assuming a freedom which is
really given empirically in immediate human experience, and that
all-powerful natural necessity which must be deduced from what
mankind has learned through established ways of thinking and knowing,
will opt for natural necessity. He will declare the experience
of freedom to be an illusion, and will extend the area of natural
necessity to include the most intimate experiences of the human
being, so that mankind will be fully enmeshed in the web of natural
necessity. And in the same way he will assess in the light of this
hypothetical world conception the nature of the beginning and the end
of the earth. He takes those laws and interconnections produced
by physics and chemistry etc., and builds out of them such hypotheses
as the nebular hypothesis, that is, the Kant-Laplace theory of the
beginning of the earth. Then, out of the second principle, the
teaching about mechanical heat, he constructs hypotheses about the
heat death in which the earth will perish.
In this way one can extend
into the most intimate details of the human being, as well as to the
boundaries of the world-all, the contemporary explanation of
natural appearances, as they surround us in the world in which we
wander between birth and death, without disputing its
fruitfulness. But then, if we reach a certain degree of
self-perception, we ask ourselves, “In that case, wherein
lies the dignity of man, wherein exists true human worth?” Here
we come to the point where we turn our gaze to the moral world, to
that which seems to be an ethical, moral impulse. We feel that it is
only in carrying out a moral ideal, permeated with religious fervour,
that we can achieve an existence fully worthy of mankind. We could
not call ourselves fully human if we did not think that motive was
active in us which we describe as ‘moral’, which streams
into the social life, and seems to be inwardly vibrating in us with
what we call the Divine in the world order. But for a modern man who
in all honesty adopts the viewpoint from which he surveys mechanical
causality, the necessary order of nature, there is no bridge leading
from the natural order, which according to a certain way of knowledge
must include man himself, to that other order, which is moral, and
which is bound up with what man must consider to be his entire
dignity, his entire worth.
In most recent times, to be
sure, a certain expedient has been devised in order to bridge this chasm
which has opened up between the two components of our human make-up.
It has been said that we can only regard as truly scientific
that which will explain the whole world in terms of natural
necessity, including man, and including the beginning and the end of
the world. And from this standpoint scientific validity is given to
nothing that cannot be absorbed without contradiction into a thinking
spun out of this natural order. But yet, a realm has been
established with an entirely different kind of certainty, with
the certainty of belief. Man looks within on that which shines in us
as a moral light, and says to himself. “No scientific knowledge
can guarantee in any way the significance of this moral sphere, but
man must find within himself a certainty of belief. He must recognise
out of the Subjective that in a certain way his Being is connected
with that realm which is permeated with moral
necessity.”
At first, many people may
well find reassurance if they discriminate clearly between what man can
know and what he can believe, and can persuade themselves that this
separation gives a certain comfort, a feeling of security in life.
But if we probe deeply enough, not with a partial thinking, but with
all that thought can experience if it unites itself with the full
power of the human soul and spirit, then we must come to the
following conclusion: if the realm of natural necessity is as man has
grown accustomed to consider it in the course of the last hundred
years, then in the face of this there is no possibility of
preserving the realm of morality. This must be said, because the
moral realm simply shows nowhere the power to be a match for the
realm of natural order. We need only consider how the thought must
arise with a certain inner justification out of the contemplation of
heat entropy — I say expressly, must arise — that
once all the remaining earth forces have changed into heat, this heat
cannot change itself back into any other force, and that then the
earth as such will succumb to what is called ‘the heat
death.’ Thus there is no possibility for an honest thinker who
must hold fast to the current way of thinking about natural
causality, other than to say to himself: of this earth which has
succumbed to heat death there remains a huge field of corpses, not
only including all men but with them all moral ideals. They must
disappear into the lifeless, if, in recognising the sole validity of
natural necessity we accept that the earth is to succumb to
‘the heat death.’
For a man who faces the world
without prejudice, this reflection produces an experience that even
takes from him the certainty of a moral world order, and above all
leaves him in a situation where he must see the world as split
asunder, so that he can only say to himself: “Moral ideas rise
up out of natural necessity like foam bubbles, and like foam bubbles,
they vanish.” For, according to natural necessity, what is
connected in the innermost being of man with human worth and dignity
cannot be acknowledged as having real existence. How shall I
say? Granted that one accepts a formal division between knowledge and
belief, yet, even if one has already found a certainty of belief,
against the necessary exactions of science, certainty of belief can
give no inner guarantee for the reality of what is moral.
This not only affects man's
theoretical ideas. If a man intends to live honestly, he must work
with it into his deepest world experiences, and there take hold of it
through events which lie deep in the subconscious, disturbing that
which gives inner security, which makes it possible for a man to have
a stable connection with the world, not only by means of thinking but
also through experience. And a man who has a feeling for such
connections could say to himself: What is called up in such an
uncanny way out of the depths of human life in this twentieth
century, like a devastating wave, proceeds when all is said and done
out of the harmony — or one could say the disharmony — of
all that the individual has experienced about himself. For our
frightful catastrophic time is born finally out of the
innermost condition of the human heart and soul. Such an inner
division as I have described to you does not appear only on the
surface of the soul-life, as a theoretic world-conception. It sinks
down to the depths out of which comes the instinctive life, the life
of conscience. And so this dichotomy throws up into the world-order
discrepant feelings, disorder, producing a framework for what
is unsocial rather than fostering what is more truly
social.
Certainly, many men do not
yet give full weight to what I have described today. But the consequences
can already be foreseen, if we follow with only a little lack of
prejudice the trend of human spiritual development in the last
centuries, and especially in very recent times, and see to what moral
exhaustion, to what kind of social form this division in the human
soul must lead in the very near future. An answer will never be found
to the burning question, ‘Why do we live in such distressing
times?’ if one does not try to seek the foundation man has need
of in the depths of human life itself.
Confronting what I have here
described is that knowledge of the world which may be striven for
through anthroposophical spiritual science, by means of Imagination,
Inspiration and Intuition. We shall see how anthroposophical
spiritual science enables man to come to terms with what I have shown
today to be the most urgent problem of the present and the near
future, and what precisely in this way it seems to him that he will
be able to know. I have shown you the path which spiritual science
takes by means of Imagination, Inspiration and Intuition. I
cannot give each exercise here in detail, but you can find this
in my books which I have often mentioned here. I have drawn attention
to the way in which each exercise on the path to imaginative
knowledge gives the soul a conscious content in the same way as our
everyday consciousness is impregnated with a content when it
lives in memory. Behind what rises up in the form of memories,
consciously or unconsciously invoked, lies our physical and
etheric organisation. What takes place there, rises up into
consciousness. What our physical organisation produces in our
ordinary memory is brought about in a purely soul-spiritual way
through carrying out the exercises given in my books. Through them
one reaches ideas, which in a purely formal way are like memory
ideas, but which refer to an outer objective content, not to an
entirely personal experience. By this means we prepare ourselves
through Imagination for the knowledge of a truly objective spiritual
world.
Then, in order to reach to
Inspiration, we must not only practise in a soul-spiritual way the
production of ideas which are like remembered thoughts, but we must
work in such a way that the spirit-soul also practises forgetting, to
some extent, as it were throwing out these imaginations from the
consciousness which has been now attained. We must practise no longer
having, yes, the unreal imaginations. We must deliberately
distance them from our consciousness, so that, if I may so express
it, this consciousness has a certain emptiness. If we reach this
stage, then by means of all these practices we are able to strengthen
the Ego to the point where we find ourselves within the
manifestations of an objective, super-sensible world. In place
of the former subjective imaginations, objective imaginations light
up in our consciousness, and this lighting up of such objective
Imaginations which in fact do not come from ourselves, but from
spiritual objectivity, this is in reality Inspiration. We reach right
to the boundary of the super-sensible, that reveals itself to us in
its outer appearance through these Imaginations. Exactly in the same
way as in our sense-perceptible world, if we only let the whole man
be active in sense perception, we convince ourselves through the
reality of this sense world, of the underlying objective outer world,
so now the Imaginations we have attained give us plenary conviction
of the super-sensible world whose expression they are.
Now it is a question of
pursuing this way of knowledge to the next stage. This we reach in that
we not only push the forgetting so far that we throw out the Imaginations,
but we go yet a stage further. When a man reaches the Imaginative
world, he sees first his own life in its progression. He lives
consciously not only in the moment, but in the whole of his life as
far back as to his birth. If he is then able to go still further
back, through Inspiration, then he extends his survey to the life
before birth, as far as to the perception of a super-sensible world
out of which he came into the sense world through birth or
conception. The spiritual field of vision extends over that world
which we have lived through before birth and conception and shall
live through when we have gone through the Portal of death. This
prospect of the super-sensible world to which we belong is reached by
means of Inspired cognition.
If we now strive even
further, not only to expunge those Imaginations whose details remain within
the horizon of the Imaginative world but also to wipe out the imagination
of our whole life as man, that means, if we have acquired the forces
to thrust out what is united with our Ego through the experiences we
have had since our birth, and what is also added to it through the
fact that the horizon has widened to include a spiritual world, then
we have reached the stage not of weakening our Ego, but, just through
forgetting ourselves, of first really and truly strengthening it. And
through this we come gradually into the reality of the spiritual, the
super-sensible world. We ourselves live together with the reality of
the super-sensible world. We reach the point of recognising the
appearance of previous earth lives as something which our Ego shows
us at different stages. Then, if we have developed the capacity to
forget this Ego in its present stage, that means, to thrust out its
imaginative content, we reach the stage of perceiving the
eternal Ego.
The matters discussed by
anthroposophical spiritual science are not drawn out of some blue
haze of mysticism, rather the way to reach this particular knowledge
can be indicated step by step. It is in no sense an outer way. It is
inward in its entire journey, but it is such that it leads to the
perception of a truly objective yet super-sensible reality. And in
that we raise ourselves in this way to real intuitive knowledge, we
first obtain a true insight into what is in fact our own thinking,
our ideation, that we employ in ordinary life, with which we mix our
sense-perceptions. One reaches to full, complete reality when to a
certain extent one can create an idea for oneself, an empirical idea,
in the way I have attempted to describe in my book
The Philosophy of Freedom.
There I have tried to make known that pure thinking,
that very thinking that can live in us before we have fully united
the thinking with some outer perception. I have shown that this pure
thinking itself can be perceived as an inner soul content. But what
is in accordance with its being first lets itself be known when true
intuition enters the soul through the higher way of knowledge. Then a
man can certainly penetrate into his own thinking. Then he
lives for the first time within his own thoughts, by means of
intuition, for this intuition arises through the fact that a man
lives within the super-sensible with his own being, that he plunges
into the super-sensible.
And so one learns to recognise
something, the experience of which is a kind of destiny of
knowledge. One experiences something that is full of potency,
if one lives intuitively in the Nature of knowing. One understands
then how man is organised materially as man; one learns to know to
what extent this material organisation is in control; but one
perceives also through intuition that this control only extends so
far as to serve as a support, at most a ground out of which thinking
can unfold itself, but that the material process itself must be
broken down where true thinking appears. To the same degree in which
the material events can be reduced can that gain ground in us which
now occupies the place where matter is destroyed, that is, thinking,
ideation.
I know all the objections
that can be brought against the proposition that I put forward here, but
intuitive knowledge leads one to realise that in the place where
thinking unfolds itself a nothingness of material can be seen. It
leads one so far as to say, ‘In that I think, I am not, if I
allow the material being, that as a rule man regards as
authoritative, to be considered the only being to have
validity.’ First matter must withdraw itself from the
organism and make room for the thoughts, the ideas, then these
thoughts and ideas can develop within man. Thus, in that place where
we perceive thinking in its reality, we see the destruction of
material existence. Therein we perceive how matter goes over
into nothingness.
Here is where we stand on the
boundary of the laws of the conservation of matter and energy. One
must recognise how far these laws of matter and energy extend, so
that one can summon up the courage to contradict them when this is
necessary. One can never penetrate the nature of thinking in an
unprejudiced way to the place where matter destroys itself, if one
acknowledges the law of conservation to be absolute, if one
does not know that what prevails in the sphere which we survey
outwardly in the physical and chemical fields etc., is yet not valid
where our thinking takes place on the platform of our human
organisation. If it were not necessary out of a certain basis to
place this knowledge before the world today, one would not expose
oneself to all the mockery and objections that must come quite
understandably from those who, according to well-known hypotheses,
regard the laws of the conservation of matter and energy as absolute,
valid without exception.
But just as through Intuition
one learns to know the relationship between thinking and the matter which
surrounds us in the physical world, so through intuition one learns
to recognise the connection of Inspiration, that Inspiration which is
so powerful in Spirit, with the human feeling and rhythmic system. In
the nerve-sense being physical substance is annihilated. By this
means the nerve-sense system can be the basis for thinking, for
ideation. The second system in man is the rhythmic system. With this
the feeling life is psychically connected, as is the thinking life
with the nerve-sense system. The connection of the objective world
outside man which we approach through Inspiration shows us that
through Inspiration we become aware of a World Being which plays into
us as the sense world plays into us through thinking. This inspired
world plays into us through the breathing process, which carries its
rhythm right into the brain processes and into the rest of the
organism.
Now one learns to recognise
what lives within the human being as rhythm. This will not destroy matter,
as in the case of the thinking process, but it will retard life so
that it must for ever stimulate itself anew. The usual purely
mechanical breathing rhythm provides an inner rhythmic basis
for this retardation and renewal, which is certainly a two-fold
process of breathing and feeling. When the soul-feeling events unite
with the physical breathing rhythm we perceive this union as an
Inspiration, as a Being which lives objectively in Inspiration and
can be perceived through Intuition. In short we learn in this way to
recognise the whole connection between the feeling and the rhythmic
system in man. We recognise that here a complete annulment of matter
does not take place as in the nerve system, but there is a damping
down of matter. Thus we learn step by step to ‘see
through’ the human being. And in this way we look into the
feeling life of man and see what can only be there through the fact
that in the rhythmic events life can always be held back and will
stimulate itself anew.
Thus we see a second power
working in the human being, in that we perceive the harmony of the slowing
down and the renewal of life. We see the significance of man's entire
rhythmic life, and how it is bound up with his whole being, body and
soul. And as we survey this second element in man, it will certainly
become clear to us that man bears in himself a real force, which is
in rhythmic interchange with an outer force active in the
super-sensible. And we could also survey in a similar way the
metabolic limb system. In that we raise ourselves to Inspiration,
Intuition and Imagination we see, soul-spiritually, what is active in
man as a real though unconscious force. Our customary objective
knowledge gives us only the forms. Through it we are as it were
only observers of the world. That, however, which we reach through
Imagination, Intuition and Inspiration we have first as a free inner
soul product, obtained from super-sensible knowledge, from something
which is objective in man, through which we can see clearly how the
human will works in moral deeds. If we have first recognised that
pure thinking involves a breaking down of matter, and is connected
above all with a death-bringing process, through and through a
process working in matter in a backward direction, then one
comes to the point of being able to recognise that everything which
appears as soul-willing is connected with the up-building processes,
the processes of growth. These growths, these up-building processes,
the activities of the organs and the reproductive process in us, damp
down our ordinary consciousness of the depths of the human organism,
and the will arises out of those depths of the human being to which
the ordinary consciousness does not reach. Thus, as thinking lives in
the death process, willing lives in what is growing, thriving,
fructifying.
We then perceive further,
through Intuition, how out of the digestive system, through the will when
it has its motive in pure thinking, substance in the human organism is
pushed into the place where the breaking down process takes place.
Thinking as such breaks down, but willing builds up. Indeed this
building up activity is such that from the beginning of life right up
to death this process is latent in the human organism. An up-building
process is certainly there. In that we bring our moral motives, in
the sense of my
The Philosophy of Freedom
to true, free moral
intuition, we live such a human life that, out of its organism,
through the will process substance is placed where substance has been
destroyed. Man becomes inwardly creative, inwardly up-building. In
other words, we see within the cosmos, in the human organism,
nothingness filled with new creating in a fully material sense. This
means nothing else than that in so far as a man consistently follows
the way of anthroposophical knowledge he reaches the stage
where within man the pure moral ideals are world-building
forces reaching right into materiality.
Here we have certainly a place
where the moral world itself becomes creative, where something arises
out of human morality which guarantees its own reality since it bears
itself within itself, since it creates itself. And then we learn
through Intuition really to know the outer world. We see how the
mineral kingdom is caught up in a death-bringing process, a
wasting-away that we have well learned to recognise as a
corresponding process in our own thinking. And in the same way we
learn to recognise how this wasting-away process draws into itself
plant and animal life. Then we do not look to a heat death (an idea
which has validity within certain limits, but is somewhat one-sided),
but we look to the wasting-away of the entire world, which is
permeated with minerality, and which is all around us. We see this,
which we recognise as the world of causal necessity, in its
transitoriness, and we recognise the world which we build up out of
pure moral ideas as that which arises from the ground of the other,
dying world.[See
Man as Symphony of the Creative Word,
Lecture VI, penultimate paragraph. Ed.]
In other words, we now recognise
how the moral world is connected with the world order of physical
causality. We have in the pure moral will of the human being
something which conquers causality in man, and therefore for the
whole world.
Whoever thinks honestly about
the causal explanation of nature finds in its domain no place in the
world where it does not prevail. And because it prevails, a power
must arise which destroys its validity. This is the moral world,
recognised within the general nature Of man, which contains within
itself the power to break through natural causality, not, to be sure,
through working miracles, but through a course of development.
For that which finds a place within the human being where causality
can be destroyed, sets itself there within him as a means of
destroying causality. It is of prime significance for the world
of the future. Nevertheless, we now see here the reality of human
willing which enters into an alliance with pure thinking. For through
it we obtain — and this is the most beautiful life fruit of
anthroposophical scientific knowledge — an insight into the
value of man in the cosmos, through which we also can feel the
dignity, the high office of man within the cosmos.
Things in the world are not
so interrelated as with our abstract ideas we often think they are. No,
they cohere as realities, and one powerful reality is the following.
It is true that not everyone today is able as yet to attain to
Imagination, Inspiration and Intuition. But as spiritual
investigators we take with us through all these stages of
knowledge that thinking which develops one thought out of another
with inner necessity. This thinking each man can experience now if he
will give himself freely to it. And it stems from this, that the
results of spiritual knowledge, when once they are found, can always
be proved afterwards, by means of pure thinking, since the spiritual
investigator takes this pure thinking into the whole of his life of
ideation.
Knowledge of human worth,
feeling for human dignity, willing in love for humanity: These are the
most beautiful life fruits nurtured in man when he assimilates what is
bestowed on him by spiritual science.
For this spiritual science
works through the will, so that it can reach up to what I have
described in my
Philosophy of Freedom
as moral intuition. And its power streams into human life as the moral
ideal. The moral intuitions are gradually permeated with what indeed is
love, so that we can become men who act freely out of love springing
from our individuality. Thereby Spiritual Science approaches an
ideal stemming from Goethe's time. It spoke most clearly through his
friend Schiller. When Schiller familiarised himself with
Kantian philosophy, he learnt much from Kant about theoretic
philosophy, but he could not always accept Kant's moral
philosophy. In this Kantian moral philosophy Schiller found a
numbing conception of duty, presented by Kant in such a way that duty
seemed to stand there in its own right as a natural power, working
compulsively on man. Schiller experienced the worth and dignity of
man, and would not accept the idea that to be virtuous a man must
submit to spiritual compulsion. Schiller gave utterance to this
beautiful saying: ‘Gladly do I serve my friend, yet, alas, I
act from inclination, so it often vexes me that I am not
dutiful.’ For in the Kantian sense, Schiller meant, one must
even try first to suppress all liking for one's friend, and then do
what one does for him out of a rigid conception of duty.
That the connection of man with
morality must be other than this, Schiller revealed as far as it was
possible to do so in his time, in his Letters concerning the
Aesthetic Education of Mankind, where he wished to show how
duty must sink down so that it becomes inclination, how inclination
must rise up so that the content of duty becomes congenial. Duty must
sink down, natural instinct must rise up in free men, who do out of
their inclination what benefits the whole of humanity. And in that
man looks for where moral intuition is rooted in the human being, in
that he looks for what is the real driving, ethical motive in moral
intuition, he finds it at its highest in love purified by spirit.
There, where this love has become spiritual, there it draws into
itself moral intuitions; and a man is moral because he
loves duty, because it is something that comes out of the
Individuality itself as a directly active power.
It was this that brought me, in
The Philosophy of Freedom,
to place against the Kantian moral
philosophy a direct antithesis drawn from Anthroposophy. The
Kantian thesis says: ‘Duty! Thou sublime and mighty name, that
dost embrace nothing charming or ingratiating, but requirest
submission,’ thou that ‘settest up a law ... before which
all inclinations are dumb, even though they secretly work against
it.’
Through such a conception of
duty man can never be so spiritualized in his inmost being that he becomes
a free creator of his moral activity. Out of this attempt to
penetrate the human being by means of anthroposophical knowledge of
man, I placed in my
Philosophy of Freedom
against this stiff
Kantian idea what you find there: ‘Freedom, thou friendly,
human name, beloved of all who are virtuous, in thee is contained
what my humanity values most, which makes me servant to none, thou
who settest up no law, but awaitest what my virtuous love itself will
recognise as a law because it feels itself unfree against every law
that is forced upon it.’
So I believed I must speak in
The Philosophy of Freedom
of how moral human worth shines out
in fullest splendour when it is one with human freedom, and is rooted
in true human love. For one can show by means of anthroposophy
how this love of duty can become in the widest sense love for mankind
and therefore, as we will further consider, can become a true ferment
in the social life. What arises today as the most urgent, the most
hotly discussed social question can only be resolved if man bestirs
himself to recognise the connection between freedom, love, the
human being, spiritual and natural necessity.
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